 and the Tenants Rodin and the Tenants Max. Senior Chief Head Officer Palentes, drill instructor, Henry Sargent Thompson. Guests are encouraged to take photographs in the seating area at any time during the ceremony, except during the planning of the group's events for today's ceremony is as follows. At 100, Cadmium Alpha, commanding officer at Oop Officer Grand Command Newport, the Rear Admiral, Kenny Pepps, commanding Naval Supply Systems Command, the guest of honor for today's ceremony will arrive. Guests with the S-Term Rise for the arrival of the official party are men standing for the planning of the National Anthem in the location. The commanding officer and guest of honor will address the graduate in class and make a sure of the event of office. The graduates will then be recognized to feed a presentation to the commission by the commanding officer and the guest of honor. Guests will be asked to rise for the planning of the service office and the final dismissal. Please rise for the arrival of the official party, the men standing for the National Anthem in the location. Officer of Training Command Newport, arriving. Naval Supply Systems Command, arriving. Thank you for the season of celebrating sweet baby Jesus. We know that all, therefore we celebrate with these men and women who have answered the call to lead their sailors to do the nation's bidding. We thank you for their commitment to the American way of life. We are especially grateful for the friends and family represented here today. Each of them will sacrifice much for our collective freedoms. We ask that you give them peace and understanding. May all that is said and done here today bring you glory and honor to the accomplishments of these graduating. We ask your blessing upon the staff, upon the school, our base, this nation, and our world. In all your holy names, we pray. Amen. Please be seated. Zero four, ten, two, four. Ready? Ladies and gentlemen, Captain Everett Alcoran, Officer of Training Command Newport. Ladies and gentlemen, have an EPS distinguished guests, veterans, service members, Officer of Training Command staff, family members and friends, and most importantly, the soon to be commissioned officers of OCS class zero four, or tech two four. Good morning. Good morning, sir. I'm excited to welcome 79 of our newest graduates into one of the most challenging and fulfilling careers, that of Naval Officer. To the family and friends joining us, I applaud you for the great work you did preparing to meet these individuals, prior to their arrival here. Your love, support, and encouragement have produced a remarkable individual seed here, and it's enabled them to make sound choices. We're grateful to these graduates for their choice to serve, and they could not have got to this point without the careful guidance and support of family and friends. On behalf of the Navy and the grateful nation, please be set my most sincere thank you. To the graduates here today, I'm proud and touched on every one of you. You all have been either options of volunteering to serve your country, that you chose this path. I thank you for your patriotism, and your willingness to serve. I assure you that a lack of service holds many rewards, and will bring you great fulfillment. You've completed rigorous military, academic, and physical training. You've overcome obstacles, nothing was handed to you except opportunity. Opportunity to make something more of yourself, to learn, to lead, to grow. You seize that opportunity, and today, you reap its rewards. I congratulate each and every one of you for this significant and memorable achievement. It's now time to embrace a new opportunity, believe what is truly the Navy's most precious resource, sailors in the fleet. In the years ahead, your knowledge and leadership skills will be tested often. You'll be standing watch and working alongside fellow officers and sailors around the world, around the clock. Know that you're doing significant and meaningful work for our country. The mission of the Navy is to help tremendous importance to our nation and the world. We serve to defend our great nation and when we are compelled to fight, we will win. Work hard. Learn the warfare and professional skills of your designator. Strike on the best and give your country 100% effort. Nothing else will suffice. The nation and the Navy expect the best from you, the highest standards of personal, professional combat, excellence in leadership, and a strict adherence to the Navy's four values, honor, courage, and commitment. I applaud your accomplishment and perseverance. You're about to embark on a great adventure, one in which I hope you'll find both professional success and personal fulfillment. Hope you unlike any other job you've ever had and regardless of how long you serve our nation, will most assuredly be a time of new life upon which you will look back with much pride and satisfaction. Congratulations to each and every one of you. I wish you fair wins in following scenes. It's now my privilege and moment to introduce you to our guest of honor, we're Admiral Kenneth Epps, Commander in Naval Supply Systems Command and Chief of the Supply Corps. Admiral Epps is a 1990 graduate at the Vanderbilt University with commission to the Reserve Officer Training Program. He holds the Master of Business Administration from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he was the recipient of the Frank Hawkins Kenan Award for excellence. He's a distinguished graduate of the Industrial College of the Armed Forces. He's previously commanded Naval Supply Systems Command with weapon systems support on the Fleet Logistics Center in Pearl Harbor, a float he served on the USS Kitty Hawk, USS Leite Gulf, and USS Carl Vincent. Other assignments include Instructor and Educational Counselor at the Navy Supply Corps School, aide and flight attendant to Commander in NASA and Chief of the Supply Corps, readiness analyst and program objective memorandum development assistant with the Office of Chief of Naval Operation, action officer at the Defense and Distance Agency, director of material and budgets at the Naval Laboratory Control Point, Philadelphia, assistant commander for financial management and comptroller at NASA, chief strategy and readiness division on the Joint Staff, assistant commander for supply operations and logistics policy at NASA, assistant professor at the Eisenhower Schools for National Security and Resource Strategy and director of legal ordinance and supplier of the US Fleet Forces Command. His leadership is essential to continue success of the world's greatest Navy and to conducting enabling supply chain acquisition and operational logistics required to sustain naval forces worldwide to prevent and decisively win wars. We are privileged to have him here with us today to share his thoughts. Ladies and gentlemen, please join me in welcoming our guest of honor today, Rear Admiral Ken Aps. Thank you, Captain, for meeting that terribly long bye. I apologize to you all. But thank you for that introduction to our distinguished guests, faculty and staff of Officer Canyon School and most importantly, most importantly, the families and members of OCS class, four tech, 24, good morning, and welcome. And what I'm gonna ask is, if you all could give, I want them to, as they embark on their journey in the Navy, I want them to get used to what we do in the Navy and that is, we oftentimes would never forget that the family folks behind you are responsible for you being here today. And I wanna make sure, usually wait to the end of the speech to thank the spouses and partners and significant others and moms and dads. I'd like you all to give yourself a round of applause for producing this outstanding group up here. So please, round of applause. I'm honored to be here today. And Captain Alcorn and his team enough for the invitation. So I am not an OCS graduate. I am an OCC graduate. So I cannot fathom what you all have just been through over the last three plus months. I distinctly remember going to my ROTC indoctrination and it only lasted a week. And I remember being so annoyed after that week, after having the first class mixture and yelling and screaming at us and our version of OCS, but a short version. And I remember how annoyed I was after a week of doing that. So the fact that you all went through this leadership indoctrination pipeline for three months, my hats are off to you. That said, I always thought OCS was the right move. It's quick, it's efficient. So my hats off to you all, not only for your wisdom and choosing to go to OCS, but the Captain Alcorn said, you all had a choice. I had kind of a quick broke road with my commission. So I say, I'll take a lot of these fellowships and I'll be glad to sign up, but you all are different. You all have either had prior service and decided you wanted to become an officer or you were doing something else and decided that you wanted to serve your country. So my hats off to you. I'm fired up for the 79 of you headed off to do everything from being pilot to a public affairs officer. To include, we're excited, 15 of you will soon be joining my tribe. And we'll make sure at the end of this, you did a group selfie before I leave for the day. Whether you come from a military family, you're prior enlisted, or this is your first exposure to the Navy, today is very special. And it's special because it's the culmination of your hard work, your dedication, your focus, and probably most importantly, your desire to be a part of something people do. When I spoke with one of your cohort, classmates prior to arriving in Newport, he asked me, hey, can I get some advice on how to succeed in OCS? And mind you, I didn't have the heart to tell him I didn't do OCS, like his dad, I went to ROTC. So what I said to him was like anybody else, hey, just go watch Officer and Gentleman, right? Like everyone else, watch Officer and Gentleman. It's dated, a little cheesy, it's overactive, but I said the relationship between Luke Nasset Jr. and Richard Gere, that'll give you kind of a sense of what that was gonna feel like, and I'll let you tell me afterwards if Gunny and the chief who ran your class was anything similar to the movie. The only thing I could offer him was, you know, it's kind of a crucible moment you're going through, so just don't take it personally, run through, it's what we all have to go through. I said you're gonna PT a lot, you're gonna lose a lot of weight, and the only thing I didn't say, so I wanna tell you now, Alex, and I apologize for not sharing this with you, but I would not go out and buy and close in the next week or two, because you usually became that weight back pretty quickly. Outside of that, you all are in a good place. But I said to Alex, I said the real focus of OCS is to serve as a gateway. Part of it's the military thing, you're getting used to, you're not prior, it's used to the lingo, the protocols, the customs. But for me, and for the Navy, the bigger element is about learning what you sign up for, and what that is is, it's what it means to be part of a team. It means what do honor, courage, and commitment mean, and how you learn to embrace and project those values. The lessons that you learned in OCS will serve as a foundation for your success whether you stay in, I'm coming up on my 34th year now, so if you come out and you stay that long, or you just do one step and decide, hey, you're glad you served your country, you wanna do something else, the things that people aren't here will serve you the rest of your life. As you prepare to take the output office though, so what I'll do very briefly is I wanted to share a couple of life lessons and hopefully success tips that I would share with myself. Just a couple of them here, and we'll get you, we'll swear the other and get you on your way, and you all are very excited to graduate and get out of here. So, point number one. You are all now defenders of the American way of life. Chaps hinted at that, and his prayer opened up. And like I said, I talked about, there's a bunch of supply code people here about to join my tribe, I'm very excited about that. And it's true, but what's unique about the Navy is we have a bunch of different tribes. You all came in, you're gonna be doing different stuff here, they all kind of have their different customs and things they like to do, and a lot of the times like-minded people tend to get drawn together, so you will quickly go off to training pythons and become part of this mini-tribe. And so, what I wanted to send you all and share with you is, regardless of what tribe you've ended up in, we're all here for the same purpose, and that is to defend the American way of life. And this isn't just graduation day in hyperbole, I'm spewing at you. The United States is a maritime nation. The source of our prosperity, the source of the freedoms that we enjoy, the source of all the goodness that we do is bound and transacted over the Earth's oceans. Key lifelines and communications are carried on cables that dot the floor of those oceans. And any interruption to either global trade or that communication line is gonna wreak havoc not only on our day-to-day life, but the rest of the planet. So you are or now, whether you're a PAO, whether you're a Submariner, whether you're a Cryptologist, whether you're an Intel officer, it doesn't matter, you're now part of an organization whose prime charter is to ensure unfettered access to global shipping lanes while protecting the sovereign nation of these broken oceans. I'll let you process that first one. Point number two, and this is a very important lesson, your character means everything. Once you finish your follow-on training, you're about to embark on a journey of leading men and women. There are a few things more noble than life than being a leader, but it's sometimes a tricky proposition. Here's my tip of the day, and this is counter to sometimes intuition and how you can't believe as you're developed. One, it has nothing to do with how smart you are. It has nothing to do with where you went to school. It has no, it has nothing to do with what kind of athlete you are, or your, or even who your dad is, or who your dad is as well. It also has nothing to do with your upbringing. It has nothing to do with the circumstances surrounding it, or what opportunities you had, or didn't have in life prior to today. Because you know what? Leaders are made, they're not born. And there's really only one central ingredient, you need to be a good or great leader. And that is trust. You need to still trust in your men and women. You need to instill trust in your chief, the petty officer, who can be here salivating when you're a worse nightmare depending on how well she or he trusts you. Most critically, your sailors need to trust you. Will you go back for them? How best are you in their lives? I'm telling you, I'm telling you now, there is no better rat sniffer out there than a Navy sailor. You can warrant fresh at a boot camp. They can smell a fake from a mile away and the minute you lose their trust, you're done. It's over. So how do you, how do you gain their trust? This is pro tip number two. Obviously as their leader, you need to project confidence and confidence in the fact that you all have graduated through this program and were selected to be officers in the United States Navy and that each one of you is singularly prepared and qualified to exude confidence and confidence. So do not worry about that part. You do work, talk less, you gotta walk the walk. Say what you mean, you gotta do what you say and you gotta follow up. But the real special sauce here, you really want the pro tip on being a great leader is you got to learn to put your men and women ahead of you first. This is what separates the great ones from the run of the mill officers. You have to recognize it's not about you, it's not about you getting your warfare pen, it's not about the medals you gave, it's down to that. Your goal in life as an officer, it's about what you can do to help your men and women achieve their dreams. How you help them get through their personal tragedies and the bumps of life. The more you do for your men and women, the more they will do for you. It is that easy, time and time again, time and time again. You see the opposite happen. Self-interest is a real thing. So my word, my word of warning to you, don't be that bad. It's all about them, it's never about you. My final advice to you, and we'll close out here. And of all the things that I'm gonna say to you, this is probably the one that I hope you take to the heart most and is probably the most insightful, permanent wisdom that if you follow through with it, I can almost guarantee your results. You ready for this? And I have to put a disclaimer in here. I'm not a lawyer, I'm not a CPA, I'm not a certified, registered financial advisor, so all I'm about to share with you is what I would tell my universal knowing what I know about it. But here is my, and in the context of that, I share this advice based on my assumption that really the pillars of a good life are revolved around three things. Strong relationships are human beings that you care about. So you've got strong relationships with people you care about, a key pillar of a good life. Your health is obvious, and then the third one is financial security. So I don't have enough time to talk about the first two. I would take an entire day to do that, but the last one I can get, I mean it's an easy one for you. So here is the nugget that you've been waiting for. The best advice I've ever gotten about investing, and I've been reading about investing that entire life, is this. Do it early and do it often. Do it early and do it often, that is it. Now, here's what we do with that advice. And again, I'm only recommending to you what I would recommend to my 21, 25, hour-old jewel or so. First, you have to start a savings habit. So if you are not a saver, and you haven't developed a habit of saving a piece of your income every paycheck, you need to do that. If there is one thing you can take away out of here, you can get everything else I said, start a savings habit. The second, if you need a primer on how to get this, I've read 1,000 books on personal finance. The book I would recommend was not written by Dave Ramsey. The book I would recommend to you is called The Millionaire Next Door. It was written in 1995. It is the OG book on personal finance. I encourage you all to get it on the DOD Library for free download. I encourage you to read it. Trust me here. Finally, put that knowledge to good use. You all have a 401 TSP. I encourage you to save early, save often, and save until it first. Don't just max out the TSP up to the max. That's where a lot of people will stop. I would save the power of you, I'd save as much as you can in your TSP, until you max that out, and then once you max that out, I would save in a Roth IRA, and then once you max that out, I'd put money if you got kids and you wanted to send them to school at five, two, nine. Then and only then after that, then and only then you've gotten to that point when I start maybe splurging a little bit about yourself. Now, if it seems intuitive, advice to listen to, let me give you a thing that happens to all of us. It's called lifestyle creep. The car you drive is an O1, it's typically not the car you drive at an O4. And if you can learn, that's the thing I ever did in my life was, when I made O4, I kept my lifestyle as what the same lifestyle I had as an O1 and O2. You let that and compound interest work for you. You will be in great shame. Save until it hurts. Do it while you're young and when you're older it'll be much easier to 30 years and then if I'm still around in 30 years, I'll send you my email and you can send me your thank you. That is my advice to you. As I prepare to administer the oath, I want each of you to be answering to take a moment to reflect on what we're about to do here. You're about to take a note to the Constitution of the United States of America. You're not taking a note to a person or to a Navy or to a mission. You're pledging to support and defend the foundational document of our country which is what makes us the United States of America and is what makes us special. As you take this, remember, the responsibility you will shoulder is both profound and noble. Uphold those ideals of honor, courage, and commitment and let the Constitution always guide you and the challenges you face and the decisions you're gonna make. Always remember that you are not defending just a nation. You are defending the promise and the premise of America itself. I cannot be more thrilled to have you join our ranks. I can't tell you how delighted I am. I was an ROTC guy, I said I was gonna do four years and you get out. This was in 1991, I graduated from ROTC so you can do the math. 1994 was supposed to be my time. I took off the uniform, I rode the bag again, I rode in the 2023, speaking to you. I have lived a full, rewarding, and wonderful life and I wish that all of you here in this room at the end of your life, you wanna look back and you wanna feel like you did something meaningful. You take my advice today and with a bit of, good luck at your back, you'll get back and then some of those journey you're about to begin on. So congratulations, class. Thank you for having me as your speaker today and I look forward to seeing you in the play. Thank you for your mention. The class will now receive the oath of office. To all military personnel in uniform, please come to the position of attention. Zero four, tack two four, attention. Class, zero four, tack two four, raise your right hand. State your name. I'm President Williamson. Haven't been appointed an insin from the United States Navy. I've been appointed an insin from the United States Navy. Do hereby accept such appointment. Do hereby accept such appointment. And do solemnly swear. And do solemnly swear. That I will support and defend. That I will support and defend. I follow my constitution and the United States. Against all enemies. Against all enemies. For storm and domestic. For storm and domestic. That I will bear true faith. That I would bear to faith. And allegiance to the same. And allegiance to the same. That I take this obligation freely. That I take this obligation freely. Without any dental reservation. Without any dental reservation. For purpose of evasion. For purpose of evasion. But faithfully. to discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter. So help me God. So help me God. Congratulations, Ainsons. Round of applause all of you. The Distinguished Graduates' Assembly will now be recognized by the commanding officer and guest of honor for their achievements while under grown training upon here and opposite train commanding board. Lieutenant Thomas Edie Award is presented to the Ainsons who has achieved the highest overall average in academics, military training, and physical fitness. This award is being presented to Ensign Ritter. Additionally, Ensign Ritter has been awarded the Rear Admiral Stephen B. Hoots Academic Award for achieving the highest academic average in the class. Ensign Ritter has been designated as a surface worker officer and has been assigned to DDG89 USS Mustang in San Diego, California. Ensign Ritter is a distinguished naval graduate. Chapter Party of the United States Marine Corps Physical Fitness Award is presented to the Ensign who achieved the highest overall grade in physical fitness while attending Officer Candidate's Award. This award is presented to Ensign Bloss. Ensign Bloss has been designated as a student naval aviator and has been assigned to Naval introductory flight evaluation in Ensign Rural Florida. Ensign Bloss is a distinguished naval graduate. The Commander Jack Ledette leadership award is presented to the Ensign who chose by the class as the peer who most inspired them and personifies the highest standards of personal example sound management practice and moral responsibility. This award is presented to Ensign Bloss. Ensign Bloss has been designated as an intelligence officer and has been assigned to Navy Intelligence Officer Base of course in Danneck, Virginia. We are now recognized for remaining graduates. Ensign Bloss has been designated as an information fresh officer in the Science Information Fresh office of Base of course, Bombay, Virginia. Ensign Tr毆er Day has been designated as flight processor in AssOO, U411. Ensign إلى seniu with been designated as flight processor with been designated as flight processor in US4 It's been Enrol points S that has been designated as flight processor in AssOO, U411. and it's in reverse. It's in order to. and designated service worker officer in nuclear and assigned the LPD-17 USA San Antonio corporate provision. Since then, Adamson has been designated submarine officer in nuclear, assigned in the Third Power School in Charleston, South Carolina. Since then, HACA has been designated aviation maintenance duty officer and assigned CVS-71 versus Theodore Roosevelt, San Diego, California. Since then, Adamson has been designated student naval aviator and assigned naval military pilot lab with evaluation, naval air station principal of Florida. Since then, Adamson has been designated Sniper Officer and assigned to Sniper School in New Court, Rhode Island. Since then, Austin has been designated intelligence officer and assigned the Naval Intelligence Officer basic force, DM-Net, Virginia. Since then, Adamson has been designated service worker officer and assigned to LSD-42 USA St. Germantown, San Diego, California. Since then, Adamson has been designated intelligence officer and assigned the Naval Intelligence Officer basic force, DM-Net, Virginia. Since then, Adamson has been designated service worker officer and assigned to LCS-18 USA's Charleston, San Diego, California. Since then, Adamson has been designated service worker officer and assigned to LSD-44 USA's Johnson Hall, Norfolk, Virginia. Since then, Adamson has been designated civil engineer core officer and assigned the Public Works Department of Washington, Washington, D.C. Since then, Adamson has been designated plastic material. Since then, he is seperate. Since then, he has been designated civil engineer in Newport, Rhode Island. Since then, he has been designated Sniper Officer, Landing props to farm timber. Since then, it has been designated in the middle of the school for it. It's in better than Desna and submarine officer nuclear in assigned nuclear power school across the south for life. It's in Fisher and it's in designated Slycrosp, it's in assigned Slycrosp school before the outage. It's in Fogosong, it's in designated Slycrosp, it's in assigned Slycrosp school before the outage. It's in Pre-Depth, it's in designated Slycrosp, it's in assigned naval infrastructure and flight evaluation at Naval Air Station in School of Florida. It's in Gallivary, it's in designated Crippelosch Warp Officer, it's in assigned Crippelosch Warp Air Basic Course in School of Florida. It's in Haddonbrook, it's in designated Slycrosp, it's in assigned Naval Air Station in School of Florida. It's in designated Crippelosch Warp Air Basic Course in School of Florida. It's in designated Slycrosp, it's in assigned LCS-12, it's in designated San Diego, California. It's in Houston, it's in designated Information Fresh Officer, it's in assigned Information Officer Basic Course in Virginia. It's in G, it's in designated Circus Warp Air in Norfolk, Virginia. It's in Jones R. It has been designated as a splice corp officer. It's been assigned splice corp school to be board for admin. It's in Joseph. It has been designated as a squarper officer. It's been assigned LSD 46, U.S.S. Torquotown, Norfolk, Virginia. It's in Canaan. It has been designated as a student naval aviator. It's been assigned as a naval introductory fire evaluation, naval air station, and school school. It's in Calendare. It has been designated as a squarper officer. It's been assigned to LSD 48 versus Ashland. It's in San Diego, California. It's in King. It has been designated as a splice corp officer. It's been assigned it's splice corp school to be board for admin. It's in Kirk. It's been designated as an intelligence officer. It's been assigned as a naval intelligence officer basic force in Damneck, Virginia. It's in Kirk. It has a distinguished naval graduate. It's in Long Beach, Virginia. It's been designated as a splice corp officer. It's been assigned splice corp school to be board for an admin. Vincent Matton has been designatedolyphosaurus and assignedskyetst full new court divided in Central Marshal has designatedicken and assigned energy to fire It's been assigned to my partner at the fight for school before it's been designated. It's been assigned to Naval Infantry Fighter Reduction at Naval Air Station and School of Florida. It's been designated Information Professional Officer in Virginia Beach, Virginia. It's in it's been assigned to Naval Infantry Fighter Reduction at Naval Air Station and School of Florida. It's in It's in it's been assigned to DG 87 USS Mason in Mayport, Florida. It's in It's been assigned to Naval Infantry Fighter Basic Force, Virginia. It's in It's been assigned to Nuclear Power School across the It's in The student naval flight officer has been assigned to Naval Insurgent Flight Iovation by the Naval Air Station in Pensacola, Florida. It's in Pesecretia, has been designated, Cryptologic Worker Officer. It's assigned to Cryptologic Worker Officer, Basics Corps in Pensacola, Florida. It's in Pettit, has been designated, Circus Worker Officer. It's assigned to DVT71, who assists Ross, Norfolk, Virginia. It's in Rodriguez, has been designated, Information Professional Officer, has been assigned to Information Professional Officer, Basics Corps, Virginia Beach, Virginia. It's in Ruger, has been designated, Student Naval Flight Officer, has been assigned to Naval Introductory Flight Iovation, Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Florida. It's in Sander, has been designated, Flight Worker Officer, has been assigned to Flight Worker School, Port, Florida. It's in Schwall, has been designated, Circus Worker Officer, has been assigned to LCS38, USS Kingsville, and San Diego, California. It's in Truger, has been designated, Information Professional Officer, has been assigned to Information Professional Officer, Basics Corps, Virginia Beach, Virginia. It's in Simbron, has been designated, Student Naval Aviators, has been assigned to Naval Introductory Flight Iovation, Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Florida. It's in Seraphine, has been designated, Student Naval Aviators, has been assigned to Naval Introductory Flight Iovation, Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Florida. It's in Silvia, has been designated, Intelligence Officer, has been assigned to Intelligence Officer Basics Corps, Dan Neck, Virginia. It's in Simon Center, has been designated, Student Naval Aviators, has been assigned to Naval Introductory Flight Iovation, Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Florida. It's in Snezinski, has been designated, has been assigned to Naval Introductory Flight Iovation, Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Florida. and since all of us I have been designated to search for an officer assigned to LCS 18 USS Charleston, San Diego, California. And since U.S.A. has been designated intelligence officer, been assigned to intelligence officer basic force, Dan Neck, Virginia. And since SSA has been designated intelligence officer, been assigned to intelligence officer basic force, Dan Neck, Virginia. And since Oliver has been designated to search for an officer assigned to LCS 1887 USS Mason, Maybord, Florida. And since Tom has been designated as life officer, been assigned to Life Force School, New Florida. And since Torres has been designated critical officer, been assigned critical officer basic force, in store Florida. And since Torres is a distinguished naval president. And since Watkins has been designated as student naval aviator, been assigned to intratractory fighter aeration, Naval Air Station, Pennsylvania, Florida. And since Western has been designated as student naval flight officer, been assigned to naval intratractory fighter aeration at Naval Air Station, Pennsylvania, Florida. And since White has been designated intelligence officer, has been assigned to intelligence officer basic force, Dan Neck, Virginia. And since Wilson C. has been designated critical officer, been assigned to critical officer basic force, in store local Florida. And since Wyndham has been designated student naval flight officer, has been assigned to naval intratractory fighter aeration, Naval Air Station, in store local Florida. And since Yang has been designated service worker officer, engineering duty officer, and has been assigned to DDG 73 Decatur in Honolulu, Hawaii. And since Hall has been designated public affairs officer, has been assigned a naval special worker for 1, San Diego, California. Ladies and gentlemen, please join me in recognizing the United States Navy's newest incense. I'm going to sing songs in the final of this lesson. Class 04, Class 04, attention!